Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
banner
restatjournal.bsky.social
Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
@restatjournal.bsky.social
REStat is a 100-year-old general journal of economics. Edited at
@harvardkennedy.bsky.social, the Review shares empirical & theoretical contributions for a wide readership.
mitpressjournals.org/loi/rest
Mortality of displaced worker and his partner increases after male job loss, but not after female job loss. Just Accepted new paper by Christina Gathmann, Kristiina Huttunen, Laura Jernström @laurajernstrom.bsky.social Lauri Sääksvuori, and Robin Stitzing zurl.co/hxqhG
In Sickness and in Health: Job Displacement and Health Spillovers in Couples
Abstract. Using administrative labor market data matched to mortality statistics and patient records, we document that negative labor market shocks produce sizable health spillovers in couples. For every 100,000 displaced men, there are 1,100 additional deaths. Of those, 60% accrue to the displaced worker, but 40% are due to excess spousal mortality. We find a stunning gender asymmetry: while male job displacement generates persistent negative health effects, no such dire consequences are observed after a woman’s job loss. We explore several explanations for these patterns: risk sharing through spousal labor supply; earnings losses and public insurance; widowhood; regional mobility and gender roles in the family.
zurl.co
November 24, 2025 at 2:00 PM
The switch from paper to electronic medical records prevented deaths among HIV patients in Malawian clinics. Just Accepted new paper by Laura Derksen @lauraderksen.bsky.social‬, Anita M. McGahan, and Leandro S. Pongeluppe zurl.co/7RJBQ
The Lifesaving Impact of Electronic Medical Records for HIV Patients
Abstract. This paper shows that replacing paper-based records with electronic medical records (EMRs) improves HIV patient retention and prevents AIDS deaths in the low-income country of Malawi. An event study of 106 HIV clinics shows a 28 percent reduction in annual deaths five years after EMR implementation, with the greatest impact on children. Improvements in health outcomes appear due to efficiency gains, rather than to changes in the medical care provided at visits. These efficiency gains allow clinics to better manage patient data, trace lapsed patients and return them into care, and adapt to higher patient volumes over time.
zurl.co
November 20, 2025 at 2:00 PM
Just Accepted new paper, “Maternal and Infant Health Inequality: New Evidence from Linked Administrative Data” by Kate Kennedy-Moulton, Sarah Miller, Petra Persson, Maya Rossin-Slater, Laura R. Wherry, and Gloria Aldana. zurl.co/OqicE
Maternal and Infant Health Inequality: New Evidence from Linked Administrative Data
Abstract. We use linked administrative data on the universe of California births to provide novel evidence on economic inequality in infant and maternal health. Infants and mothers at the top of the income distribution have worse birth and morbidity outcomes than their lowest-income counterparts, but are nevertheless the least likely to die in the year following birth. Racial disparities swamp these income disparities, with no racial convergence in health outcomes as income rises. A comparison with Sweden shows that infant and maternal health is worse in California at virtually all income levels.
zurl.co
November 19, 2025 at 2:00 PM
The Federal Reserve's communication of an inflation objective better anchored inflation expectations. In the September issue, by Brent Bundick and A. Lee Smith zurl.co/eptQ1
Did the Federal Reserve Break the Phillips Curve? Theory and Evidence of Anchoring Inflation Expectations
Abstract. In a macroeconomic model with drifting long-run inflation expectations, the anchoring of inflation expectations manifests in two testable predictions. First, expectations about inflation far in the future should no longer respond to news about current inflation. Second, better anchored inflation expectations weaken the relationship between unemployment and inflation, flattening the reduced-form Phillips curve. We evaluate both predictions and find that the Federal Reserve’s communication of a numerical inflation objective, first through its Summary of Economic Projections and later through the announcement of a 2% target in 2012, better anchored inflation expectations. Moreover, inflation expectations in the United States have remained anchored amid the volatility of the COVID-19 pandemic. In contrast, similar analysis reveals no evidence of anchoring in Japan despite the adoption of a numerical inflation target.
direct.mit.edu
October 24, 2025 at 1:00 PM